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Lions hold off on SOS despite latest scrumhalf injury

Lions hold off on SOS despite latest scrumhalf injury

Perth Now7 hours ago

British and Irish Lions coach Andy Farrell has downplayed the need to send out a scrumhalf SOS despite Tomos Williams suffering a hamstring injury during Saturday's 54-7 win over the Western Force.
Williams injured his left hamstring while acrobatically diving over for his second try of the night in the eight-tries-to-one romp over the Force.
The 30-year-old was clearly in pain as he limped from the field in the 47th minute, putting the rest of his tour in doubt.
Fellow scrumhalf Jamison Gibson-Park was unavailable for the match due to a recent glute injury, but it's hopeful he will be fit to tackle the Queensland Reds on Wednesday night.
If there is any doubt on Gibson-Park, it would leave Alex Mitchell as the last No.9 standing at present.
Scrumhalf Ben White is currently with the Scotland international side in New Zealand for a match against the Maori All Blacks, and could be called upon if needed.
But Farrell played down the need to call in reinforcements just yet, expressing confidence in Gibson-Park's fitness, and saying he wants to wait longer to see the severity of Williams' injury.
"Jamison's fit and ready to go, and has been training fully now for the best part of the week, so we're happy with that," Farrell said.
"But you don't know until you know (about Williams' injury).
"We have to let these things settle down and see what the outcome is, giving it a little bit of space.
"We need to talk about that and assess that and make the right call for the group. We have our fingers crossed."
One of the brightest points out of Saturday's game for the Lions was the performance of No.8 Henry Pollock, who looked every bit the future superstar he's being touted to become.
Pollock's bullocking runs proved troublesome for the Force, and the 20-year-old showcased his creativity with a chip-and-chase that led to a second-half try to lock Joe McCarthy.
"I thought he was brilliant," stand-in Lions captain Dan Sheehan said.
"He does his own thing. He has his own way of playing. He's probably different to a lot of the forwards.
"I enjoy that kind of rugby, off the cuff, see what's in front of you, and make it happen.
"And with his sort of skill set and speed, he can, he can certainly make it happen."
The Lions will head to Brisbane on Sunday ahead of Wednesday night's clash with the Queensland Reds at Suncorp Stadium.
Farrell was happy with his team's performance against the Force, with the five-try blitz in the second half particularly impressive.
But he is also well aware there are plenty of areas to improve.
The Lions were dominated in the possession and territory stakes in the first half, and their more fancied scrum could only break even against the Force.
The tourists also struggled with their kick-off receives, and lost Pollock on the stroke of half-time to a yellow card due to an accumulation of team infringements.
"Our discipline for one," Farrell said when asked about areas to improve on.
"You mentioned kick-offs there, so it's a good warning for us, isn't it?
"I thought we got a bit lateral at times, not engaging enough, and tried to be too tidy attack-wise at times."

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'I'd give up my left testicle': Tom Robertson
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'I'd give up my left testicle': Tom Robertson

So just how desperate is prop Tom Robertson to play for the Wallabies again? "I would give up my left testicle," the Western Force veteran says without hesitation. It's been three years since Robertson last pulled on the Wallabies gold. Since then, he has ruptured his ACL, spent a year-long study sabbatical at Oxford as part of his path to becoming a doctor, and fell back in love with rugby again. Robertson produced a standout Super Rugby Pacific campaign this year to win the Nathan Sharpe Medal as the Western Force's player of the season. The 30-year-old further bolstered his Wallabies hopes with a strong display for the Force in Saturday night's 54-7 loss to the British and Irish Lions in front of 46,656 fans at Optus Stadium. The Force's scrum was widely tipped to be humbled against the Lions. But powered by Robertson's efforts, the Force's scrum stood firm all night, and was arguably the better of the two teams. Robertson has notched 31 caps for the Wallabies since making his debut in 2016, and his selection in the squad for next Sunday's Test against Fiji in Newcastle shows he's now well and truly back in the frame. Getting a gig to feature in the three-Test series against the British and Irish Lions would be a dream come true. "It would mean the world," Robertson said. "You know, I haven't played a Test since 2022, and that's the highlight of your career. "I would give my left testicle to do it again. "Just to be in the squad is an honour, and to push for a gig in that 23 would be unreal. "I came close last year being in the squad for a bit, but I had a few injuries and didn't make the 23. "It would be an unreal experience to play a Test against the Lions." Robertson said there were definitely moments he doubted he would ever feature for the Wallabies again. "I did my ACL in 2023 and took a year off, went over to Oxford," he said. "It was great fun. And I sort of got away from rugby, but I think that was the best thing for me. I really got that drive back. "When I was away, there were definitely moments there where I didn't know if I'd come back to professional rugby, but I'm very glad I did. "I feel like I've got that spark back." Another Force player who boosted his chances of a Wallabies recall was Dylan Pietsch, who was the standout performer against the Lions on Saturday night. The 27-year-old produced a series of dazzling runs in the first half in what was just his second match back from a serious quad injury. "I did a 25cm grade-three tear in my quad," Pietsch revealed of the injury. "It was pretty big, it was in the first three minutes of the Highlanders game (in round eight), when I went to take off and it just ripped." Pietsch returned for the Force's final game of the season, and credits the team's physiotherapist, "Magic" Mike Neil, for having him in tip-top shape. "I just feel smooth," Pietsch said. "Throughout the back end of last year, and then going into the start of this year, I was kind of fighting for a lot of things. "Like my joints weren't really going that well. "Just to be able to not have to worry about that, and get to the speed and the agility that I want to be at is pretty cool." So just how desperate is prop Tom Robertson to play for the Wallabies again? "I would give up my left testicle," the Western Force veteran says without hesitation. It's been three years since Robertson last pulled on the Wallabies gold. Since then, he has ruptured his ACL, spent a year-long study sabbatical at Oxford as part of his path to becoming a doctor, and fell back in love with rugby again. Robertson produced a standout Super Rugby Pacific campaign this year to win the Nathan Sharpe Medal as the Western Force's player of the season. The 30-year-old further bolstered his Wallabies hopes with a strong display for the Force in Saturday night's 54-7 loss to the British and Irish Lions in front of 46,656 fans at Optus Stadium. The Force's scrum was widely tipped to be humbled against the Lions. But powered by Robertson's efforts, the Force's scrum stood firm all night, and was arguably the better of the two teams. Robertson has notched 31 caps for the Wallabies since making his debut in 2016, and his selection in the squad for next Sunday's Test against Fiji in Newcastle shows he's now well and truly back in the frame. Getting a gig to feature in the three-Test series against the British and Irish Lions would be a dream come true. "It would mean the world," Robertson said. "You know, I haven't played a Test since 2022, and that's the highlight of your career. "I would give my left testicle to do it again. "Just to be in the squad is an honour, and to push for a gig in that 23 would be unreal. "I came close last year being in the squad for a bit, but I had a few injuries and didn't make the 23. "It would be an unreal experience to play a Test against the Lions." Robertson said there were definitely moments he doubted he would ever feature for the Wallabies again. "I did my ACL in 2023 and took a year off, went over to Oxford," he said. "It was great fun. And I sort of got away from rugby, but I think that was the best thing for me. I really got that drive back. "When I was away, there were definitely moments there where I didn't know if I'd come back to professional rugby, but I'm very glad I did. "I feel like I've got that spark back." Another Force player who boosted his chances of a Wallabies recall was Dylan Pietsch, who was the standout performer against the Lions on Saturday night. The 27-year-old produced a series of dazzling runs in the first half in what was just his second match back from a serious quad injury. "I did a 25cm grade-three tear in my quad," Pietsch revealed of the injury. "It was pretty big, it was in the first three minutes of the Highlanders game (in round eight), when I went to take off and it just ripped." Pietsch returned for the Force's final game of the season, and credits the team's physiotherapist, "Magic" Mike Neil, for having him in tip-top shape. "I just feel smooth," Pietsch said. "Throughout the back end of last year, and then going into the start of this year, I was kind of fighting for a lot of things. "Like my joints weren't really going that well. "Just to be able to not have to worry about that, and get to the speed and the agility that I want to be at is pretty cool." So just how desperate is prop Tom Robertson to play for the Wallabies again? "I would give up my left testicle," the Western Force veteran says without hesitation. It's been three years since Robertson last pulled on the Wallabies gold. Since then, he has ruptured his ACL, spent a year-long study sabbatical at Oxford as part of his path to becoming a doctor, and fell back in love with rugby again. Robertson produced a standout Super Rugby Pacific campaign this year to win the Nathan Sharpe Medal as the Western Force's player of the season. The 30-year-old further bolstered his Wallabies hopes with a strong display for the Force in Saturday night's 54-7 loss to the British and Irish Lions in front of 46,656 fans at Optus Stadium. The Force's scrum was widely tipped to be humbled against the Lions. But powered by Robertson's efforts, the Force's scrum stood firm all night, and was arguably the better of the two teams. Robertson has notched 31 caps for the Wallabies since making his debut in 2016, and his selection in the squad for next Sunday's Test against Fiji in Newcastle shows he's now well and truly back in the frame. Getting a gig to feature in the three-Test series against the British and Irish Lions would be a dream come true. "It would mean the world," Robertson said. "You know, I haven't played a Test since 2022, and that's the highlight of your career. "I would give my left testicle to do it again. "Just to be in the squad is an honour, and to push for a gig in that 23 would be unreal. "I came close last year being in the squad for a bit, but I had a few injuries and didn't make the 23. "It would be an unreal experience to play a Test against the Lions." Robertson said there were definitely moments he doubted he would ever feature for the Wallabies again. "I did my ACL in 2023 and took a year off, went over to Oxford," he said. "It was great fun. And I sort of got away from rugby, but I think that was the best thing for me. I really got that drive back. "When I was away, there were definitely moments there where I didn't know if I'd come back to professional rugby, but I'm very glad I did. "I feel like I've got that spark back." Another Force player who boosted his chances of a Wallabies recall was Dylan Pietsch, who was the standout performer against the Lions on Saturday night. The 27-year-old produced a series of dazzling runs in the first half in what was just his second match back from a serious quad injury. "I did a 25cm grade-three tear in my quad," Pietsch revealed of the injury. "It was pretty big, it was in the first three minutes of the Highlanders game (in round eight), when I went to take off and it just ripped." Pietsch returned for the Force's final game of the season, and credits the team's physiotherapist, "Magic" Mike Neil, for having him in tip-top shape. "I just feel smooth," Pietsch said. "Throughout the back end of last year, and then going into the start of this year, I was kind of fighting for a lot of things. "Like my joints weren't really going that well. "Just to be able to not have to worry about that, and get to the speed and the agility that I want to be at is pretty cool."

'I'd give up my left testicle': Tom Robertson
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Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

'I'd give up my left testicle': Tom Robertson

So just how desperate is prop Tom Robertson to play for the Wallabies again? "I would give up my left testicle," the Western Force veteran says without hesitation. It's been three years since Robertson last pulled on the Wallabies gold. Since then, he has ruptured his ACL, spent a year-long study sabbatical at Oxford as part of his path to becoming a doctor, and fell back in love with rugby again. Robertson produced a standout Super Rugby Pacific campaign this year to win the Nathan Sharpe Medal as the Western Force's player of the season. The 30-year-old further bolstered his Wallabies hopes with a strong display for the Force in Saturday night's 54-7 loss to the British and Irish Lions in front of 46,656 fans at Optus Stadium. The Force's scrum was widely tipped to be humbled against the Lions. But powered by Robertson's efforts, the Force's scrum stood firm all night, and was arguably the better of the two teams. Robertson has notched 31 caps for the Wallabies since making his debut in 2016, and his selection in the squad for next Sunday's Test against Fiji in Newcastle shows he's now well and truly back in the frame. Getting a gig to feature in the three-Test series against the British and Irish Lions would be a dream come true. "It would mean the world," Robertson said. "You know, I haven't played a Test since 2022, and that's the highlight of your career. "I would give my left testicle to do it again. "Just to be in the squad is an honour, and to push for a gig in that 23 would be unreal. "I came close last year being in the squad for a bit, but I had a few injuries and didn't make the 23. "It would be an unreal experience to play a Test against the Lions." Robertson said there were definitely moments he doubted he would ever feature for the Wallabies again. "I did my ACL in 2023 and took a year off, went over to Oxford," he said. "It was great fun. And I sort of got away from rugby, but I think that was the best thing for me. I really got that drive back. "When I was away, there were definitely moments there where I didn't know if I'd come back to professional rugby, but I'm very glad I did. "I feel like I've got that spark back." Another Force player who boosted his chances of a Wallabies recall was Dylan Pietsch, who was the standout performer against the Lions on Saturday night. The 27-year-old produced a series of dazzling runs in the first half in what was just his second match back from a serious quad injury. "I did a 25cm grade-three tear in my quad," Pietsch revealed of the injury. "It was pretty big, it was in the first three minutes of the Highlanders game (in round eight), when I went to take off and it just ripped." Pietsch returned for the Force's final game of the season, and credits the team's physiotherapist, "Magic" Mike Neil, for having him in tip-top shape. "I just feel smooth," Pietsch said. "Throughout the back end of last year, and then going into the start of this year, I was kind of fighting for a lot of things. "Like my joints weren't really going that well. "Just to be able to not have to worry about that, and get to the speed and the agility that I want to be at is pretty cool."

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